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Banana Wars - The Price of Free Trade: A Caribbean Perspective (Paperback, New)
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Banana Wars - The Price of Free Trade: A Caribbean Perspective (Paperback, New)
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Bananas are taken for granted today as part of the diet of ordinary
people in industrial countries. In the Windward Islands of the
Caribbean, bananas provided around one-third of all jobs and half
their export earnings - until recent WTO rulings began to undermine
the industry. Much of this trade and employment has now disappeared
as a result of these rulings; and at the end of 2005, the EU is due
to give up the last non-tariff measures designed to enable this
trade to continue. Unemployment, poverty, and further emigration
therefore loom over these islanders, or the tempting alternative of
growing and trading in illegal drugs. And all because WTO rules
take too little account of the problems of tiny island economies
and the human cost of rigid application of global free-trade rules.
In this absorbing history, Gordon Myers tells the extraordinary
story of how the US government, in response to grievances of one
American corporation, led the World Trade Organisation to nullify a
European Community commitment to protect the livelihood of small
Caribbean banana growers. The WTO's own working practices also
emerge as inflexible and myopic. The story illustrates the
inadequacy of an international trading system dominated by
free-trade ideology but lacking the flexibility necessary to enable
very small and highly vulnerable states, like the Windward Islands,
to receive the protection that they need in order to survive.
Moreover, increasingly powerful supermarket chains are able to
exploit this free-trade framework to insist on ever lower prices,
to the short-term benefit of consumers but the serious detriment of
growers in the developing world. This book is a call for new
arrangements in the EU that will enable the Caribbean banana
industry to survive beyond 2005, and for an outlook in the WTO that
gives greater consideration to the needs of very small states with
vulnerable economies.
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